UrbanWarrior
Senior Member
Oh really? I was going to say the Alt is a pretty decent design. It's on par with the EV, Saskatoon, and St. John's Alt's, which are the three nicest in the chain's portfolio. Not that that's a high bar, but yeah.
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If I recall the Alt Hotel in East Village is all glass on the exterior. Not sure where you come up with your observationI think Ive said this earlier about the alt hotel on one of the forums, they tend to look like something out of soviet russia, particularly due to a bulky and relatively glassless design. I don't think a building over 10 storeys should be built with such a lazy design. It becomes an eye sore relatively fast. Such a new area should be promoting creative designs, all I see is a wide box stuck up. Sucks what we've been getting down here lately in Calgary vs over in Vancouver/Toronto.
When Im talking about glass, i dont mean cubical sqaures of windows cut out like in east village. The east village one is just as flop, when u have such a prominent area and u end up building such a bland building. Older buildings such as bankers hall and suncor have been able to test the age of time with todays modern building because they were created with a vision to last. I can already see the Alt in east village becoming outdated and an eye sore in 10 years. You would have to check some of the developments happening over at the vancouver and toronto skryise pages to realize what I mean when I say Calgary has been throwing out some sloppy designs minus a few exceptions. Maybe its the economy and its more cost effective to have simpler designs right now but I feel that if ur gonna do it once, do it right. Its also astounding that not single skinny highrise has been put forth like the trend going on in NYC and torontoIf I recall the Alt Hotel in East Village is all glass on the exterior. Not sure where you come up with your observation
When Im talking about glass, i dont mean cubical sqaures of windows cut out like in east village. The east village one is just as flop, when u have such a prominent area and u end up building such a bland building. Older buildings such as bankers hall and suncor have been able to test the age of time with todays modern building because they were created with a vision to last. I ca
already see the Alt in east village becoming outdated and an eye sore in 10 years. You would have to check some of the developments happening over at the vancouver and toronto skryise pages to realize what I mean when I say Calgary has been throwing out some sloppy designs minus a few exceptions. Maybe its the economy and its more cost effective to have simpler designs right now but I feel that if ur gonna do it once, do it right. Its also astounding that not single skinny highrise has been put forth like the trend going on in NYC and toronto
I think Toronto and NYC, especially in Manhattan tall thin designs are more common due to land cost, and available land in general. In Manhattan, even if you can afford half a block of land it usually isn't available. I look at the Toronto and New York pages all the time, and like a lot of the buildings going up. I'd love to have some of that stuff here, but I don't see it happening in a city this size. I think we're lucky to have gotten buildings like Telus Sky, 707 5th.When Im talking about glass, i dont mean cubical sqaures of windows cut out like in east village. The east village one is just as flop, when u have such a prominent area and u end up building such a bland building. Older buildings such as bankers hall and suncor have been able to test the age of time with todays modern building because they were created with a vision to last. I can already see the Alt in east village becoming outdated and an eye sore in 10 years. You would have to check some of the developments happening over at the vancouver and toronto skryise pages to realize what I mean when I say Calgary has been throwing out some sloppy designs minus a few exceptions. Maybe its the economy and its more cost effective to have simpler designs right now but I feel that if ur gonna do it once, do it right. Its also astounding that not single skinny highrise has been put forth like the trend going on in NYC and toronto
Seems like alot of glass too me
They must do a lot of density transfers because a lot of the new buildings that are tall and skinny (9 DeKalb, 432 Park, 111 West 57) have no public space or much in the way of podiums and are crammed onto small skinny parcels.Not really. The skinny towers in NYC need a lot of spare density to achieve their heights. The towers have remarkably low lot coverage as density limits are not much higher than Calgary. This is accomplished through low rise podiums, open plazas, and spare density transfer from nearby, lowrise, heritage buildings. The reason NYC build them and no one else is purely economics. Only in NYC, are people dropping 25 to $100 million on an apartment.
They must do a lot of density transfers because a lot of the new buildings that are tall and skinny (9 DeKalb, 432 Park, 111 West 57) have no public space or much in the way of podiums and are crammed onto small skinny parcels.